Hatfield Township v. Lansdale Municipal Authority

19 Pa. D. & C.2d 281, 1959 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 130
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County
DecidedApril 6, 1959
DocketNo. 20
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Pa. D. & C.2d 281 (Hatfield Township v. Lansdale Municipal Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatfield Township v. Lansdale Municipal Authority, 19 Pa. D. & C.2d 281, 1959 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 130 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Gerber, J.,

This action in equity was commenced by plaintiffs, Township of Hatfield and four individuals, against defendants, Lansdale Municipal Authority, hereafter referred to as the authority, William Stothoff Co., Inc., Wiley Reading, Charles R. Ridington and Thomas T. Ridington. By leave of court, during the course of the litigation, nine additional individuals were named as party plaintiffs arid the caption changed to plead a class action. Charles R. Ridington died subsequent to the filing of [283]*283the complaint and his executrix was substituted as a party defendant.

The cause arose as a result of the authority commencing the drilling of a water well in Hatfield Township. The authority had contracted with William Stothoff Co., Inc., to do the drilling and Wiley Reading was the supervisor on the job site for the drilling company. The land on which the well was drilled originally belonged to Thomas and Charles Ridington, the authority having initiated eminent domain proceedings to obtain the land necessary for the well site.

Plaintiffs have prayed for an injunction against defendants, enjoining the operation of the well on four grounds. Plaintiffs claim that an option granted to the authority by the Ridingtons is void because Charles R. Ridington was, at the time, a supervisor of the authority and that such voidness extends to the eminent domain proceedings. Secondly, plaintiffs allege that the authority must obtain a special exception' under the Hatfield Township Zoning Ordinance before they can use the land for the proposed well operation. Thirdly, plaintiffs allege that approval by the Pennsylvania Public Utilities Commission is required, and fourthly, it is averred that the operation of the water well by the authority is unlawful because it damages and impairs the private water supplies of plaintiffs. Defendants denied plaintiffs’ averments.

After two days of testimony by all parties, the hearing was recessed and by agreement of the parties, the authority completed the drilling of the well and conducted a two day pumping test so that the court could be presented with testimony as to the effect the authority well would have on the wells of plaintiffs and the class they represent. Two additional days of hearings were then held. Proposed findings of facts and briefs were submitted to the chancellor. This opin[284]*284ion and order constitutes a complete determination on the merits of the action. . . .

Findings of Fact

6. On or before November 1, 1957, Charles R. and Thomas J. Ridington were the owners of a tract of land on the northwest side of Oak Park Road, Hatfield Township, containing 16.58 acres.

7. On November 1, 1957, Charles R. and Thomas J. Ridington entered into an agreement with the Lansdale Municipal Authority giving the authority an option to drill a well on a two-acre portion of said tract and take title to the same at a price of $1,200 per acre if sufficient water was obtained.

8. By a resolution adopted January 9, 1958, the Lansdale Municipal Authority, under its power of eminent domain, condemned the two-acre portion of said tract plus a 20-foot right of way, damages to be set by a jury of view.

9. On November 22, 1957, the William Stothoff Co., Inc., under contract and direction of the Lansdale Municipal Authority, commenced the drilling of a well on the site in question.

10. No permit had been obtained from the Township of Hatfield. After notice served by the zoning officer of Hatfield Township, an application for a permit was refused on the basis that the drilling of the well was not in compliance with the Hatfield Township Zoning Ordinance. An appeal to the Hatfield Township Zoning Board of Adjustment resulted in the refusal of the granting of a permit to the Lansdale Municipal Authority on the basis that a special exception was needed to drill the well. The appeal of the Lansdale Municipal Authority from that decision is now pending before this court, no application for a special exception having been filed.

11. Article six, sec. 601, of the Hatfield Zoning-Ordinance provides that land in the R-100 Residential [285]*285District may be used for any of the following purposes and no other: (1) Single-family dwelling; (2) Municipal buildings and municipal uses; (3) Any of the following purposes when authorized as a special exception by the board of adjustment; (a) Educational, religious and philanthropic use, excluding correctional or penal institutions; (b) Hospital, sanitorium, convalescent home; (c) Golf course and golf house, excluding driving range and miniature golf course; (d) public utility facility.

12. The site of the well herein involved is located in the R-100 Residential District of Hatfield Township . . .

Discussion

I. The effect of the Hatfield Township Zoning Ordinance on the installation and operation of the authority well has been raised in this equity proceeding as well as being a separate action in itself: In re Appeal of Lansdale Municipal Authority from Decision of Zoning Board of Hatfield Township, no. 4, February term, 1958. Since both actions involve the same property and contemplated use thérof, this court has considered them together. Although the zoning issue is discussed in a separate opinion (the appeal of the authority from the decision of the Hatfield Township Zoning Board), the court feels that it is necessary to again discuss that issue in this opinion so as to decide all the issues and questions that have been raised before it.

The property in question is located in an R-100 Residential District and section 601 of the Hatfield Township Zoning Ordinance permits a municipal use in that district. The authority contends that it is a municipal use and therefore can install and operate its well without the permission or authorization of the Hatfield Township Zoning Board. On the other hand, the township contends that municipal use, as used in their [286]*286ordinance, refers only to a Hatfield Township municipal use and does not include a proprietary function such as a water supply system. The township further contends that the authority is a “public utility facility” under section 601(3) (d) and must obtain a special exception from the zoning board before they can install and operate the well.

The Lansdale Municipal Authority is a creation of the Borough of ■ Lansdale, organized to perform the municipal function of providing a water supply system. An authority, such as the one herein involved, was born of the necessity to provide needed municipal operations in such manner as to avoid the constitutional debt limitation placed on the municipality itself. The municipality and the authority can be equated as being one and the same in substance, if not in form. The chancellor is of the opinion that the authority, in pumping and using the water in a water supply system serving Lansdale as well as other areas, is a municipal use. The authority is performing an essential municipal service.

The Hatfield Township Zoning Ordinance does not define or restrict the meaning of “municipal use.” In the absence of any guides, the court feels compelled to interpret “municipal use” in a general sense, including within it any municipal use. On this basis, the Lansdale Municipal Authority, being a-municipal use, comes within the terms of the zoning ordinance and is entitled to use the land in question for the proposed use as a matter of right.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Pa. D. & C.2d 281, 1959 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatfield-township-v-lansdale-municipal-authority-pactcomplmontgo-1959.